Lynas Rare Earths is pushing hard to land a government-backed deal with the US Department of Defense—one that would lock in price floors for their materials, matching the protection arrangements the Pentagon extended to a major domestic US producer last year.
This move signals how geopolitical supply chain concerns are reshaping resource procurement. When governments start guaranteeing price stability for critical materials, it typically means one thing: scarcity fears and dependency worries are real. The rare earths market, already volatile, could face structural shifts if such agreements become standard practice.
For those tracking how policy decisions ripple through commodities and related asset classes, this is worth watching. Government intervention in price discovery rarely stays contained to just one sector.
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0xLuckbox
· 12h ago
Once the government sets a minimum price, the rare earth market will undergo a reshuffle... This deal is about to change drastically.
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SerumDegen
· 12h ago
ngl this is just govt-backed price floor copium disguised as "supply chain resilience"... when dod starts holding hands w/ miners, cascade effects r inevitable. watch the whole rare earths complex get rekt when the subsidy machine breaks
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MidnightMEVeater
· 12h ago
Good morning, 3 a.m. The government is backing the rare earth prices? Isn't this just telling you outright—shortages are real, and dependence is real. Once the safety net is in place, the entire counterparty market will have to find a new arbitrage range.
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NFT_Therapy
· 12h ago
Government price controls to stabilize the market, the rare earth market is about to change... Now it's really playing with tricks
Lynas Rare Earths is pushing hard to land a government-backed deal with the US Department of Defense—one that would lock in price floors for their materials, matching the protection arrangements the Pentagon extended to a major domestic US producer last year.
This move signals how geopolitical supply chain concerns are reshaping resource procurement. When governments start guaranteeing price stability for critical materials, it typically means one thing: scarcity fears and dependency worries are real. The rare earths market, already volatile, could face structural shifts if such agreements become standard practice.
For those tracking how policy decisions ripple through commodities and related asset classes, this is worth watching. Government intervention in price discovery rarely stays contained to just one sector.